March
2006
Statement of the Issue
In
today's environment, healthcare executives are faced with
making challenging and complex decisions that require balancing
the current and future needs of the overall organization
with various constituencies that serve and are served
by the organization. Sometimes these decisions come about
when healthcare executives are faced with making "promises" or
revisiting previous promises made by executives. When this
happens, new challenges can come about from the difficult
task of weighing the needs of varied constituencies and
the use of resources, not to mention the ethical responsibility
to make such decisions.
Promises
are verbal or written commitments made to another person
or group of people. Promises can be formal written agreements,
such as contracts, or informal agreements such as when a healthcare executive
states to someone (or a group of people) an intention to
do something. When the executive does the latter and recognizes
that such a statement of intention will lead the person(s)
to whom it is given to count on your following through,
your statement of intention is a promise. Once made, adhering
to a promise is a moral responsibility of the healthcare
executive, even if made by one's predecessor.
Despite
the moral responsibility that one ought to respect a promise,
organizational circumstances may change sufficiently so
that the promise should be reviewed, even though the promise
may have become a long-standing tradition or expectation.
This could be a situation regardless of whether the promise
was made by the current healthcare executive or a prior
executive in the same position.
However,
because trust and honoring moral commitments are hallmarks
of successful healthcare organizations, making, revising
or rescinding a promise requires thoughtful consideration.
A healthcare executive needs sufficient reasons for both
making a promise and for breaking a promise. In the latter
case, the violation or breaking of a promise without adequate
reason leads to harm, not only to the person(s) to whom
the promise was made, but also to the executive and the image
of the healthcare organization.
Policy
Position
Making
a Promise
The
American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE) firmly
believes that healthcare executives have an ethical responsibility
to use a systematic, deliberative and thoughtful approach
to decision making when making a promise to a person or
a group of people. To ensure such an approach, the following
questions should be considered:
-
What are the circumstances surrounding the promise?
Why is the promise being considered? Why now?
-
What are the facts regarding the promise? Is the promise
legally binding? What does legal counsel suggest?
-
What are the relevant ethical considerations regarding
the promise? Is there an ethical rationale for justifying
the promise?
-
What are the options, such as maintaining the promise,
rescinding the promise or altering the promise? Will future
CEOs be able to uphold this promise? Are there circumstances
under which this promise can or should be revisited?
If so, what are they?
-
What are the implications (benefits and harms) surrounding
the above option(s)? How certain are you of those implications?
-
What are the perspectives of the stakeholders affected
by the promise?
-
Have you carefully reflected on the various options,
including conducting a quantitative and qualitative analysis
of each option and assessing both the short- and long-term
ramifications of each option?
-
After selecting a particular option, did you seek the
appropriate approval, such as the board's?
-
How is the promise going to be communicated and documented?
Has this document been shared with the relevant stakeholders?
Is it clear how future CEOs will know this promise exists?
Keeping
or Rescinding a Promise
-
Making a Decision Regarding a Previous PromiseAfter clearly identifying and acknowledging the need
to review whether a promise ought to be maintained, the
following questions should be considered:
-
What are the circumstances surrounding the promise?
Why was the promise made? Why is it being questioned
now?
What are the facts regarding the promise? Is the
promise legally obligated? What does legal counsel
suggest?
What are the relevant ethical considerations regarding
maintaining, revising or rescinding the promise?
Is there an ethical rationale for justifying the
rescinding or revising of the promise?
What are the options, such as maintaining the promise,
rescinding the promise or altering the promise?
What are the implications (benefits and harms) surrounding
each option? How certain are you of those implications?
What are the perspectives of the stakeholders affected
by the promise?
Have you carefully reflected on the various options,
including conducting a quantitative and qualitative
analysis of each option and assessing both the short-
and long-term ramifications of each option?
-
After selecting a particular option, did you seek
the appropriate approval, such as the board's, giving
the ethical grounding for the decision?
-
Implementing a Decision Regarding a Previous Promise
Decisions to rescind or revise an existing promise should
be communicated in a timely manner to all key stakeholders,
including the rationale for the action. When decisions
are made to revise or rescind a promise, a clear communication
plan is advised.
A comprehensive communication plan includes the following:
-
Identifying the key audiences and messages.
-
Choosing the appropriate spokesperson for the target
audience.
-
Obtaining the affected stakeholder perspectives
and feedback, including being prepared to justify
the decision and respond to all questions of concern.
-
Considering the response if the decision was reported
by the media.
During the communication process, if concerns or ramifications
concerning the action arise that were not previously
considered, executives should consider whether to review their decision regarding the
promise.
Whether
making a promise or reviewing a previous promise, the best
decision outcome will be achieved when thoughtful, systematic
reasoning and transparency serve as the primary guides
for executive behavior.
Common
Morality: Deciding What to Do. Bernard Gert. Oxford:
University Press 2004. (This is a general reference specifically
related to the definition paragraph)
Approved
by the Board of Governors of the American College of
Healthcare Executives on March 24, 2006. |